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MongoDB - admin user not authorized

I am trying to add authorization to my MongoDB. I am doing all this on Linux with MongoDB 2.6.1. My mongod.conf file is in the old compatibility format (this is how it came with the installation).

1) I created admin user as described here in (3)

http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/add-user-administrator/

2) I then edited mongod.conf by uncommenting this line

auth = true

3) Finally I rebooted the mongod service and I tried to login with:

/usr/bin/mongo localhost:27017/admin -u sa -p pwd

4) I can connect but it says this upon connect.

MongoDB shell version: 2.6.1
connecting to: localhost:27017/admin
Welcome to the MongoDB shell!
The current date/time is: Thu May 29 2014 17:47:16 GMT-0400 (EDT)
Error while trying to show server startup warnings: not authorized on admin to execute command { getLog: "startupWarnings" }

5) Now it seems this sa user I created has no permissions at all.

root@test02:~# mc
MongoDB shell version: 2.6.1
connecting to: localhost:27017/admin
Welcome to the MongoDB shell!
The current date/time is: Thu May 29 2014 17:57:03 GMT-0400 (EDT)
Error while trying to show server startup warnings: not authorized on admin to execute command { getLog: "startupWarnings" }
[admin] 2014-05-29 17:57:03.011 >>> use admin
switched to db admin
[admin] 2014-05-29 17:57:07.889 >>> show collections
2014-05-29T17:57:10.377-0400 error: {
        "$err" : "not authorized for query on admin.system.namespaces",
        "code" : 13
} at src/mongo/shell/query.js:131
[admin] 2014-05-29 17:57:10.378 >>> use test
switched to db test
[test] 2014-05-29 17:57:13.466 >>> show collections
2014-05-29T17:57:15.930-0400 error: {
        "$err" : "not authorized for query on test.system.namespaces",
        "code" : 13
} at src/mongo/shell/query.js:131
[test] 2014-05-29 17:57:15.931 >>>

What is the problem? I repeated this whole procedure 3 times and
I think I did it all as specified in the MongoDB docs. But it doesn't work.
I was expecting this sa user to be authorized to do anything so that
he can then create other users and give them more specific permissions.

This is very annoying or badly documented. I was struggling myself there. In the end, I have a user with global "root" role ans still cant do some things like execute commands...

D
Dan Dascalescu

I was also scratching my head around the same issue, and everything worked after I set the role to be root when adding the first admin user.

use admin
db.createUser(
  {
    user: 'admin',
    pwd: 'password',
    roles: [ { role: 'root', db: 'admin' } ]
  }
);
exit;

If you have already created the admin user, you can change the role like this:

use admin;
db.grantRolesToUser('admin', [{ role: 'root', db: 'admin' }])

For a complete authentication setting reference, see the steps I've compiled after hours of research over the internet.


WTF?! lost an hour for a stupid thing like this. Why do they put in documentation userAdminAnyDatabase instead of root?
the idea is that you first create a user that is only used for administrating other users (therefore the role starting with "userAdmin") and only then create your normal users. it kind of makes sense, but i didn't get it the first time right too... @akostadinov
This didn't work for me on MongoDB v3.4.7: db.grantRolesToUser('admin',[{ role: "root", db: "admin" }])
@Cerin This code DID work for me: db.grantRolesToUser('admin',[{ role: "root", db: "admin" }]), and that makes me confused. I'm not authorised to run a command, and yet I can run a command to make myself root, and then run that command. Very strange :S
I know the upstream docs mentions it and in case you're looking all over for it, to authenticate, you have to "use" the admin db like so: use admin; and then db.auth("username", "password"); Hope this helps someone.
J
John Petrone

It's a bit confusing - I believe you will need to grant yourself readWrite to query a database. A user with dbadmin or useradmin can admin the database (including granting yourself additional rights) but cannot perform queries or write data.

so grant yourself readWrite and you should be fine -

http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/built-in-roles/#readWrite


I'm not sure this answer is relevant to the question, but either way it provides incorrect information. The dbOwner role includes the readWrite role: docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/built-in-roles/#dbOwner
the answer is correct - the dbadmin and useradmin roles (which is what the original poster asked about) do not include readWrite. The dbOwner does but that's not what the original poster was using and was asking about.
You're absolutely right. Apologies. I had spent too long wrangling roles and was befuddled.
So you can have an admin user to access the actual mongodb server, and then have others for specific databases?
B
Bart C

Perhaps a quick example of how to change a current user will be helpful to somebody. This is what I was actually looking for.

Following advice of @JohnPetrone I added readWrite role to my admin user with grantRolesToUser

> use admin
> db.grantRolesToUser("admin",["readWrite"])
> show collections
system.users
system.version

I get a Error: not authorized on admin to execute command when doing this
j
jremi

You can try: Using the --authenticationDatabase flag helps.

mongo --port 27017 -u "admin" -p "password" --authenticationDatabase "admin"

If you don’t want to add roles to your users and only need this temporarily, this is the best approach.
e
el Punch

I know this answer is coming really late on in this thread but I hope you check it out.

The reason you get that error is based on the specific role that you granted to the user, which you have gathered by now, and yes giving that user the role root will solve your problem but you must first understand what these roles do exactly before granting them to users.

In tutorial you granted the user the userAdminAnyDatabase role which basically give the user the ability to manage users of all your databases. What you were trying to do with your user was outside its role definition.

The root role has this role included in it definition as well as the readWriteAnyDatabase, dbAdminAnyDatabase and other roles making it a superuser (basically because you can do anything with it).

You can check out the role definitions to see which roles you will need to give you users to complete certain tasks. https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/built-in-roles/ Its not advisable to make all your users super ones :)


So, if not root, then what role do you suggest to solve the problem?
Hi there @HendyIrawan , I would suggest that you decide on what exactly you want each of your users to be able to do and give them the role that enables them to do only that. For example if you only want a user to read (which is what the question tries to do with show collections) you should give it that ability and nothing else roles: [ { role: "read", db: "admin" } ]. Notice that the role here is read, this is database specific and you cannot do anything but that. Check out this link for other roles docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/built-in-roles
So the answer to the question here (not "for example") is "read"?
Yes. Note that the user will only have the ability to read the db specified.
c
cocoTW

It's a simple question.

It's important that you must switch the target db NOT admin.

use yourDB

check your db authentication by

show users

If you get a {} empty object that is the question. You just need to type

db.createUser( { user: "yourUser", pwd: "password", roles: [ "readWrite", "dbAdmin" ] } )

or

db.grantRolesToUser('yourUser',[{ role: "dbAdmin", db: "yourDB" }])


P
Prathmesh Bijjargi
Use Admin :
    use admin

Create a super user : 

    db.createUser(
    {
    user: "master",
    pwd: "test@123",
    roles: [ 
    { 
    role: "readWriteAnyDatabase", 
    db: "admin" 
    }, 
    {
    "role" : "dbAdminAnyDatabase",
    "db" : "admin"
    },
    {
    "role" : "clusterAdmin",
    "db" : "admin"
    },
    "userAdminAnyDatabase" 
    ]
    }
    )

Thank you for this code snippet, which might provide some limited short-term help. A proper explanation would greatly improve its long-term value by showing why this is a good solution to the problem, and would make it more useful to future readers with other, similar questions. Please edit your answer to add some explanation, including the assumptions you've made.
M
Mr. Dang

I had this problem because of the hostname in my MongoDB Compass was pointing to admin instead for my project. Fixed by adding the /projectname after the hostname :) Try this:

Choose your project in the MongoDB atlas website Connect/Connect with MongoDB Compass Download Compass/Choose your OS I used Compass 1.12 or later Copy the connection string under the Compass 1.12 or later. Open MongoDB Compass/Connect(top left)/Connect To Connection String detected/Yes/ Append your project name after the hostname: cluster9-foodie.mongodb.net/projectname Connect & Tested the API with POSTMAN. Succeed.

Use the same connection string in your code too:

Before: mongodb+srv://projectname:password@cluster9-foodie.mongodb.net/admin After: mongodb+srv://projectname:password@cluster9-foodie.mongodb.net/projectname

Good luck.


M
Michael

I came across this thread with a similar issue, but my problem was that I used the collection name instead of the database name.


i
ibirite

I had a similar problem here on a Windows environment: I have installed Bitnami DreamFactory and it also installs another MongoDb that is started on system boot. I was running my MongoDbService (that was started without any error) but I noticed after losing a lot of time that I was in fact connecting on Bitnami's MongoDb Service. Please, take a look if there is not another instance of mongoDB running on your server.

Good Luck!


I don't know why this answer was downvoted; this is a legitimate suggestion. For example, I've run into a management console that was running Tomcat under the hood. If you start a local server (of any type) you'll likely check if it's running by trying to connect to it. That first connection will succeed. You'll then wrestle with the "hidden" server before checking your server's logs and noticing that your server couldn't bind to the desired port.
N
Nick Louloudakis

In addition, notice that if your mongo shell client fails to connect correctly to the mongod instance, you can receive such "Permission Denied" errors.

Make sure that your client opens a connection by checking the connection port, but also that the port you are using in mongod is not in use. You can set a different port by using the --port <port> parameter in both the shell and the process.


J
J. Ceron

use mydb db.createUser( { user: "test", pwd: "secret", roles: [ "readWrite", "dbAdmin"],passwordDigestor:"server" } )


w
whoami - fakeFaceTrueSoul

Agreed that you've to get authenticated to admin db and needs at least a role with correct privileges which would avoid 'local host exception' from DB(this is for mongoDB's hosted on-premises), though you've everything in place & still getting not authorized exceptions on almost every command, while accessing mongoDB which got created using Mongo Atlas, then here is the place where you might know the reason, why :

https://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/219003/not-authorized-on-admin-to-execute-command-mongodb-atlas-m0-free-tier-cluster?newreg=471a9a26108243d78d4ca74a87e7a115

and also check this if you've hosted mongoDB on mongo Atlas:

https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/unsupported-commands/


M
M. Hamza Rajput

I followed these steps on Centos 7 for MongoDB 4.2. (Remote user)

Update mongod.conf file

vi /etc/mongod.conf
   net:
     port: 27017
     bindIp: 0.0.0.0 
   security:
     authorization: enabled

Start MongoDB service demon

systemctl start mongod

Open MongoDB shell

mongo

Execute this command on the shell

use admin
db.createUser(
  {
    user: 'admin',
    pwd: 'YouPassforUser',
    roles: [ { role: 'root', db: 'admin' } ]
  }
);

Remote root user has been created. Now you can test this database connection by using any MongoDB GUI tool from your dev machine. Like Robo 3T


G
Gus Bus

If you're using Atlas, note that you can't create users through the mongo shell.

I was banging my head against the wall for a while till I came across this: https://www.mongodb.com/community/forums/t/cant-create-a-root-user-from-mongo-shell/101369


S
Sorin Veștemean

For MongoDB shell version v4.2.8 I've tried different ways to back-up my database with auth, my winner solution is

mongodump -h <your_hostname> -d <your_db_name> -u <your_db_username> -p <your_db_password> --authenticationDatabase admin -o /path/to/where/i/want


B
Buminda

This may be because you havent set noAuth=true in mongodb.conf

# Turn on/off security.  Off is currently the default
noauth = true
#auth = true

After setting this restart the service using

service mongod restart


The user says explicitly that he want to start using authorization thus he uncommented auth=true. Why do you suggest to disable authorization !?
I guess ya didn't read the problem...OP wants auth, a combination of s-hunter's response for setting the user and jremi's for connecting to a custom configuration

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